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Olive file 673 Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

I have been meeting many people for the past few days

I've read that the sentence "I have been meeting many people for the past few days" implies I will continue to meet people.

Why is that the case? To me, the sentence means that I have been meeting many people for the past few days until today, but it says nothing about the future.

Could anyone explain?

  

Top answer

olive file 673 it says nothing about the future Correct. "implies" is too strong a word. It might be natural for the listener to guess that meeting people might be likely to continue, but the sentence doesn't imply it.

  • olive file 673 it says nothing about the future Correct.
  • "implies" is too strong a word.
  • It might be natural for the listener to guess that meeting people might be likely to continue, but the sentence doesn't imply it.
  • The situation could just as easily change the day after this sentence is said, and that would not make the sentence false.
  • I have been meeting a lot of people in the past few days.
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1 Answers
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olive file 673it says nothing about the future

Correct.

"implies" is too strong a word. It might be natural for the listener to guess that meeting people might be likely to continue, but the sentence doesn't imply it. The situation could just as easily change the day after this sentence is said, and that would not make the sentence false.


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